Welcome! Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015
Transcription
Welcome! Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015
Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Welcome! I am looking forward to a great year – full of discovery learning, hard work, and exhibiting a GROWTH MINDSET! Please don’t hesitate to ask questions, work collaboratively with your peers, and even HAVE FUN! Mrs. Fagan Classroom Expectations – GROWTH MINDSET Be Honest, Be Respectful, Be a Responsible Student The 5 “Es:” Engage: This phase starts the process. An "engage" activity should do the following: 1. Make connections between past and present learning experiences 2. Anticipate activities and focus students' thinking on the learning outcomes of current activities. Students should become mentally engaged in the concept, process, or skill to be learned. Explore: This phase provides students with a common base of experiences. They identify and develop concepts, processes, and skills. During this phase, students actively explore their environment or manipulate materials. Explain: This phase helps students explain the concepts they have been exploring. They have opportunities to verbalize their conceptual understanding or to demonstrate new skills or behaviors. This phase also provides opportunities for teachers to introduce formal terms, definitions, and explanations for concepts, processes, skills, or behaviors. Elaborate: This phase extends students' conceptual understanding and allows them to practice skills and behaviors. Through new experiences, the learners develop deeper and broader understanding of major concepts, obtain more information about areas of interest, and refine their skills. Evaluate: This phase encourages learners to assess their understanding and abilities and lets teachers evaluate students' understanding of key concepts and skill development. 253-571-3180 [email protected] Room 227 Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Electronic Use: We will be using personal electronic devices in class on some occasions. They will be used for educational purposes including (but not limited to) Learnzillion, Nearpod, Pointplotter, Educreations, Prezi, Cover up math, etc. Devices permitted when appropriate are cell phones, tablets, reading devices, laptops, etc. When not instructed to use an electronic device, they will be stored out of sight. This includes cell phones and ear buds. If use of electronics becomes a chronic problem, administration will be notified. If asked to put devices away, please do so quickly. If defiance arises and a student refuses to put their device away it will be confiscated by security and/or disciplinary action will be taken. Please let me know if you do not have internet access at home or a device to use in the classroom. Food and Beverage (& Gum): Water is always permitted in class. Please do not consume sugary or nonclear liquids in class. Gum will be tolerated as long as it is not a distraction to learning and is not found under desks. The privilege will be revoked if it is abused. Healthy snacks are permitted in class during work time but not during lecture time. If it has become a distraction to learning, it will not be permitted. Tardies: 3 Tardies: Lunchtime Detention & call home 5 Tardies: After School Detention, call home, as well as administrator notification. 7 Tardies: Administrator Referral Grading Policy: You will be graded in a variety of ways this year. All grading is driven by the Common Core State Standards and rubrics. 90% of your grade is content driven. The last 10% is your ability to be a good mathematician by effectively exhibiting the 8 Mathematical Practices. 253-571-3180 [email protected] Room 227 Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Understanding Common Core Standards: http://www.corestandards.org/Math/Content/HSA/introduction/ HSA - stands for High School Algebra HSS – stands for High School Statistics (part of Algebra) HSN – stands for High School Number Sense (part of Algebra) HSF – stands for High School Functions (part of Algebra) Q – Quantities CED – Creating Equations REI – Reasoning with Equations and Inequalities RN – Real Number System IF – Interpreting Functions BF – Building Functions LE – Linear, Quadratic and Exponential Functions ID – Interpreting Categorical and Quantitative Data SSE – Seeing Structure in Expressions APR – Arithmetic with Polynomials and Rational Expressions GRADE BREAKDOWN Tests Quizzes Assignments/Formative Assessments Group Projects 8 Mathematical Practices 30% 30% 20% 10% 10% Make-Up Work, Late Work, Retakes There will be NO extra credit given. Zip. Zilch. Zero. Don’t ask. Late Work Due to Absence (Make-Up Work) If you are absent on the day something was assigned, you have the number of days you were absent extra to turn it in. If you are absent on the day an assignment was due, it is due the day you arrive back at school. It is YOUR responsibility to give it to me. I will not chase you down for it. If you are absent and your assignment is accessible via internet (especially a video) my hope is that you will stay caught up and come prepared the following day. 253-571-3180 [email protected] Room 227 Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Late Work Due to Lack of Prioritizing: You will lose 20% for an assignment that is one day late. You will lose an additional 10% for each additional day. Work will not be accepted more than 5 school days late. Late Work Due to Extenuating Circumstances: Extensions will be given for family emergencies on a case by case basis. Retakes – TO SUPPORT A GROWTH MINDSET Retakes will be allowed for those wishing to retake an assessment. Retakes are the responsibility of the student and will not be completed during class time. You must show effort of remediation to take a retake. This includes tutoring, extra practice problems, note taking from khan academy, an extra project, etc. Be aware that the retake is likely more difficult than the original test. You will only be allowed to retake a test one time. You cannot complete more than two retakes per semester. Materials: 3 Ring Notebook (1.5 in) with 5 tabs Composition Notebook Lined and Graph paper Scissors 4 Different Color highlighters TI-32 Calculator or better Recommended: Ruler, Protractor, Compass Curriculum: Unit 1: Data and Technology (15 days) Measures of Center: Mean, Median, Mode Dot plot, histogram, box plot Scatter Plots & Linear Association Data Analysis and Outliers Correlation Coefficient Distinguish between Correlation and Causation Appropriate Use of Units/Accuracy Introduction to Graphing Calculators 253-571-3180 [email protected] HSS-ID.A.2 HSS-ID.A.1 HSS-ID.B.6 HSS-ID.A.3, B.5 HSS-ID.C.8 HSS-ID.C.9 HSN-Q.A.1,2,3 HSS-ID.C.8 Room 227 Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Unit 2: Patterns of Algebraic Representations (27 days) Rational vs. Irrational Numbers HSN-RN.B.3 Function Notation (input/output) Function Representation o (tables, graphs, symbolic, pictoral) Pattern Recognition – Algebraic/Geometric/etc HSF-BF.A.2 Pattern Description o Recursive Sequence HSF-IF.A.3, HSF-BF.A.2 o Explicit Formula HSF-BF.A.2 Rate of Change HSF-IF.B.6, HSS-ID.C.7 o Linear , Quadratic, Exponential HSF-LE.A.1 o Compare what this looks like graphically HSF-LE.A.3 Unit 3: Solving Equations (24 days) Expressions o Terms, factors, coefficients HSA-SSE.A.1 o Rewrite expressions HSA-SSE.A.2 o Produce equivalent forms of expressions HSA-SSE.B.3 Creating Equations with 1 variable HSA.CED.A.1 Slope/Rate of Change & y-intercept HSS-ID.C.7 Formats of equations and be able to rearrange equations (standard, slope intercept, point slope) HSA.CED.A.4 Understand that the graph represents all solutions HSA-REI.D.10 Explain the steps to solving an equation HSA.REI.A.1, B.3 o Numerically (Algebraically) o Graphically o Using a Table Be able to represent an equation all three ways Unit 4: Solving Inequalities (13 days) Creating Inequalities with 1 variable Solving for multiple contexts HSA.CED.A.1 --------------------------------------------------------------SEMESTER FINAL Unit 5: Functions and Multivariable Algebra (22 days) Write a function o Exponential Growth and Decay Domain and Range Determine an accurate domain for a function 253-571-3180 [email protected] HSF-BF.A.1 HSF-IF.C.8 HSA-IF.A.1 HSF-IF.B.5 Room 227 Mrs. Fagan Algebra 1/2 Syllabus 2014-2015 Evaluate Functions Interpret functions represented different ways Verbally describe the relationship between functions Construct linear and exponential functions HSA-IF.A.2 HSA-IF.C.9 HSA-IF.B.4 HSF-LE.A.2 Unit 6: Systems of Equations and Inequalities (12 days) Creating Equations with two or more variables Graph systems of equations and inequalities Represent constraints of systems and inequalities Understand that the graph represents all solutions Explain the steps to solving an system Solve a system of equations Solve a system by graphing Solve a system with a linear and quadratic equation Solve using graphing, substitution and elimination HSA.CED.A.2 HSA.CED.A.2 HSA.CED.A.3 HSA-REI.D.10 HSA.REI.A.1, B.3 HSA-REI.C.5 HSA-REI.C.6, D.11 HSA-REI.C.7 Unit 7: Function Families (8 days) What happens to functions graphically? o Graphing square root, cube root, abs. value etc. Build new functions from existing functions Inverse functions HSA-IF.C.7 HSF-BF.B.3 HSF-BF.B.4 Unit 8: Quadratics and Polynomials (34 days) Review the difference between linear, exponential and quadratic formulas as an equation, a graph, a table HSF-LE.A.1, 3 Interpret the parameters of an exponential function HSF-LE.B.5 Solve quadratics with one variable HSA-REI.B.4 (b) o Completing the square HSA-REI.B.4 (a) Zeros of Quadratics (x-intercepts) Exponent Rules HSA-RN.A.2 o Rational Exponents HSA-RN.A.1 Scientific Notation Polynomials HSA-APR.A.1 --------------------------------------------------------------SEMESTER FINAL 253-571-3180 [email protected] Room 227